Some prostitutes have put up signs in the their windows of a camera with a red line through it, but it may not be enough.

The city’s first female mayor Femke Halsema is said to be laying out measures to help sex workers escape the snap-happy tourists.

It’s not the only destination struggling with overtourism right now.

In Barcelona, which has a population of 1.6 million residents, frustrated locals are fed-up with the high volume of international travellers — around 32 million people every year.

The Philippine government is considering reducing the number of cruise ships that stop at Boracay in a measure to protect the island’s environment.

And in Venice, locals regularly protest the tourists who clog the city’s streets, drive up prices beyond what Venetians can afford and leave rubbish behind. Experts have predicated the native population could drop to zero in a decade — meaning nobody from Venice will actually live in Venice.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and has been republished with permission.